| incumbent on Mon, 12 Oct 2015 20:13:42 +0200 (CEST) |
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| Re: <nettime> VW |
On Sep 25, 2015, at 2:01 PM, t byfield <[1]tbyfield@panix.com> wrote:
So, right there, VW diesel owners have a pretty ironclad case for what
boils down to speculative financial compensation: the difference
between what the cars 'would have been worth' if this flaw hadn't been
exposed and what they *are* worth -- which is zero, if only because no
one in their right mind would buy one (and in many cases reale may now
be forbidden by law).
I wouldn't say that. For whatever reason I haven't heard or read
anything about the actual impact to the driver in terms of what the
performance will be like if they do repair/replace in-field.
I've heard people say it was to make VW cars drive better and perform
better but nobody ever seems to quantify that. Is it simply a net loss
of bhp? Torque? Idle hesitation? What's the problem with these cars if
they are in compliance with regulations?
And how has this not turned into a grassfire that sucks up all VW
brands? Audi has TDI engines too. Porsche might offer a diesel turbo
Cayenne? Seat surely has a few diesels potentially impacted?
I think it's likely every car manufacturer is engaged in similar
behavior. If it's handled like the corruption and dishonesty in the
financial sector I'm sure we'll all be just fine.
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